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. Hale, in 1582) to Samuel de Champlain's 1632 map of Nouvelle France, " the maps identified by Hessler were copied by Thoreau in the fall of 1855. They cover more than a century of successive efforts to chart the coast of what is now eastern Canada and New England Hessler linked his findings to the last chapter of Cape Cod, which contains a long section (178-202) devoted to the question of how the Cape has been represented and named on ancient maps. Thoreau's work of archival excavation of the cartographic past of the Cape is similar to the logic that is at work in A Weekhtm 10 Information about these maps was provided by Nathalie Russell, curator to of literary manuscripts at the Huntington Library, High-resolution images of the two maps were obtained with the generous support of the LARCA (Laboratoire de Recherche sur les Cultures Anglophones, 2010.

A. H. Schmidt, a specialist of Thoreau's surveys and a resident of Concord, to have his opinion on the question of where Beck Stow's swamp actually is In just a few days, Allan was able to track down a reference to the swamp in the Herbert Gleason Archives at the Concord Library. He eventually located the swamp on one of Thoreau's land surveys, available on line: http://www.concordlibrary.org/scollect/Thoreau_surveys/7c.htm. The correct location is the one that appears on Bradley Dean's first map, 1906.